These polls use ballot data from real public elections. For multi-winner elections, the results
presented here may differ slightly from the real results due to minor variations in the counting
rules.

Cambridge, MA
Cambridge has used ranked-choice voting since 1941
to elect its 9-member city council and 6-member school committee.
The city computerized its elections several years ago, making ballot data available.

San Francisco
San Francisco uses ranked-choice voting to elect an 11-member board of
supervisors from districts, staggering elections of even and odd seats.
Its first election by this method was in 2004. Try voting in a San Francisco
election with the DemoChoice SF polls.

Burlington, VT
Burlington held its first ranked-choice mayoral election in 2006.
They use an elegant rule for duplicate rankings,
which sometimes happen on paper ballots. DemoChoice cannot process
duplicates, but they could be preprocessed to give the same result.